Beatskillz DropX review

Drag and drop beats

Our Verdict

DropX is admirably simple in implementation and usage, making light work of repeats and stutter edits for any and all compositional purposes.

Pros

Easy to use. Decent library.

Cons

No filter routing. Confusing LED collar. Expensive.

Described as a "drag and drop beat repeat sampler", DropX is designed to make triggering fills and stutters a truly effortless affair.

Drag up to three layered samples into it to have them automatically mapped up the keyboard from C1, and use keyswitches C0-E0 to activate host- synced note repeat timings from quarter-notes to 64th-notes, with F0 toggling triplets on and off.

Simply hold down a key to trigger the loaded sample(s) repeatedly at the chosen rate, and adjust timings on the fly, with rhythmic offset dialled in via the Swing knob.

Each of the three samples in a preset can have its level, pitch and pan adjusted (and automated), along with playback start and end points, and can be reversed with a click. They can also be individually muted, of course.

The onboard effects processing options are straightforward enough. A multimode resonant filter offers high-pass, low-pass and band-pass options, and sounds pretty good, while reverb and stereo delay modules are on hand for ambience and echo, the former with Time and Mix controls, the latter synced times from 1/2 to 1/64, Feedback and Mix.

Then there's an ADSR amp envelope (no filter routing, sadly) for volume modulation, four choices of bit depth (8, 12, 16 and 24 - we'd prefer a continuous slider), and a 0-100% distortion Mix control with a mildly confusing bipolar LED collar that's presumably on the 'to-fix' list.

The whole thing is topped off with a reasonably capacious library of presets (the vast majority of which only use one sample layer) and the nifty ability to drag your own image files into the top right of the GUI, aiding with user-made preset identification.

The combination of sampler and repeater, and the MIDI-triggered note timings, are key to DropX's success, making it a genuine performance instrument; and the effects, limited though they are, are helpful.

The price is far too high, though, given that there are no editable effects parameters and no depth or tweakability to the repeat functionality beyond its sheer playability and that Swing knob.